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/sci/ - Science & Math


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File: 249 KB, 1534x800, n3ck9kpTURBXy9hNjBiM2EyYTFjNjJlYTM4Y2Y1ZTAxM2EwNGU4NzU5My5wbmeSlQLNAyAAw8OVAgDNAyDDw4KhMAWhMQE.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10884237 No.10884237 [Reply] [Original]

How can people still say that there is no life out there?

>> No.10884239

>Europe has larger ocean than earth

lol nice bait

>> No.10884264

>>10884239
Entire solar system has 50x more water than Earth.

>> No.10884296

water = life
why?

>> No.10884322

>>10884296
Because once Earth had water and right temperatures it appeared almost instantly.

>> No.10884337

>>10884322
>Earth had water
so the question should be "how can people still say that there is no life ON EARTH?"

>> No.10884729

>>10884237
We have zero data on which to base even a guess as to whether life is "out there" or not. Anybody who says there is life out there is as clueless as somebody who says there is not.

We.
Don't.
Know.

>> No.10884805

>>10884237
I imagine that the quoted water here is not liquid water, but ice water for most of thee, correct?

>> No.10884862

Deep oceans are bad for life, dumbass. It's why most marine life is located into the shallows instead of the open ocean.

>> No.10885252
File: 3 KB, 124x124, citation-needed.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10885252

>>10884237
>people still say
[citation needed]

>> No.10885289

>>10884862
This. Even if Ganymede has more water (and even if said water was all in liquid form), the Earth has a much larger surface, and because 99,9% of organisms live where the sunlight still reaches, the Earth has a greater chance -and volume- of life. That's all assuming that life needs liquid water to form... we only have one sample, but for all we know, life could be formed in methane oceans

>> No.10885315

>>10884237
>all that pristine deuterium for powering future space colonies

Nice.

>> No.10885328

>>10884237
The real issue is that all of those moons are mostly frozen and what liquid water there is doesn't get any sunlight.

Titan is the only one of those pictured that has any real possibility of life and it would be extremely exotic and barely life by our standards, considering how cold Titan is.

>> No.10885672

>>10884862
> he doesnt appreciate thermophilic life forms
tragic, really

>> No.10885780
File: 37 KB, 586x578, rarebrainlet4.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10885780

>>10884264

>> No.10885832
File: 89 KB, 746x833, 17bd662100a4971bd41b00b2254b20ac.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10885832

>>10884237
Yes, that's water. And? The probabilities involved in the processes that take place in this water and by which life emerges are still astronomically low. By Eugene Koonin's calculations, so low in fact there is no other life causally connected with us. How can people still say that we are not alone?

>> No.10886215

>>10884296
Why not? We're a joke. We dont even have the equipment neccessary to rule out life on these worlds. We simply lack the capability. Imagine believing in the fermi paradox when we dont even have the equipment to rule out life in our own solar system.

>> No.10886886

>>10884237
The informations in this picture seem so wrong. I can't believe it.

>> No.10886931
File: 26 KB, 330x474, stupidQuestions.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10886931

>>10884805
>correct?
lrn2read

>> No.10886934

>>10886886
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book

>> No.10887173

>>10884805
A lot of it is liquid actually. Europa alone has over two times more water than Earth.

>> No.10887176

>>10884862
Yes but on Earth you have life living even in the shittiest conditions on ocean floor. All we need is microbial life. If we have proof of life existing in more than one place in a single solar system it means universe is swarming with it.

>> No.10887179

>>10885780
What the fuck are you even trying to say?

>> No.10887184

>>10886886

https://www.nasa.gov/jpl/the-solar-system-and-beyond-is-awash-in-water